Tottenham replaces goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky within 17 minutes in 2-5 loss in Champions League

For Tottenham goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, it was perhaps the most humiliating Champions League debut of all time.

Two miskicks. Three goals conceded. And substituted inside 17 minutes.

No wonder the 22-year-old Czech player looked inconsolable as he walked down the tunnel at Metropolitano Stadium, with two teammates catching him up to offer their sympathies.

Handed his first start since October and only his third appearance all season, Kinsky endured a nightmarish start to the round-of-16 match at Atletico Madrid on Tuesday when he miskicked while slipping while making a clearance in the sixth minute, leading to Marcos Llorente opening the scoring.

Then, moments after Antoine Griezmann made it 2-0 for Atletico, Kinsky attempted a first-time pass out of his area with his left foot but miskicked again.

The ball rolled into the path of Julian Alvarez, who had the simple task of slotting the ball into an empty net. Tottenham was 3-0 down after 15 minutes.

Kinsky lay face down, with his hands covering his face. He got up but stayed knelt down, one arm across his knee.

It wasn’t long before he was pulled by Igor Tudor, the under-pressure Tottenham interim manager whose bold call to leave out first-choice goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario had spectacularly backfired.

Kinsky shook his head as he walked off the field — to some applause by sympathetic Atletico fans — to be replaced by Vicario and headed directly to the tunnel. One teammate was seen with his arm around Kinsky’s shoulder as they walked to the locker room.

Kinsky was signed by Tottenham from Slavia Prague in January last year amid an injury crisis in the goalkeeper department.

He was hailed as a goalkeeper for the future and regarded as especially good with his feet.

Kinsky made 10 appearances for Tottenham last season, giving up his starting spot when Vicario recovered in February from a broken ankle.

His only two previous appearances this season have come in the English League Cup, making it a huge decision by Tudor to call up Kinsky for Tottenham’s biggest game of the campaign so far.

Kinsky clearly wasn’t ready for such a big occasion, and Tudor will have questions to answer.

Vicario had put in some shaky recent performances, having conceded two or more goals in each of Tottenham’s last nine Premier League games — none of which the team had won. In fact, Tottenham is on a club-record winless run of 11 matches in the Premier League, losing its last five as it battles relegation.

The Italian’s kicking and distribution have been particularly scrutinised, most recently in the 1-3 home loss to Crystal Palace last week.

Tudor chose to take Vicario out of the firing line — but that didn’t last long.

It marked the latest humiliation for Tottenham, which is just one point above the relegation zone in the Premier League with nine games left.

Published on Mar 11, 2026

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